The CED Clinic is supported by the Economic Development Administration, U. S. Department of Commerce, through its University Centers Program. 1
Community Economic Development Clinic Creighton Univ. School of Law Milo Alexander, Attorney and Director Senior certified law students State-wide Small businesses ( 5 employees) New & Existing Formation Contracts, leases Trademark, copyright Labor law Other Address: Milton R. Abrahams Legal Clinic/ 2120 Cass St/ Omaha, NE 68178 To apply: Call 402-280-3068, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday. Fax: 402-280-5708 E-mail: cedlaw@creighton.edu No charge for attorney time. (Client pays filing & publication charges.) 2
Nebraska Business Forms 1. Sole Proprietorship 2. Partnership General Limited Limited liability 3. Corporation C Corp S Corp 4. Limited Liability Company (LLC) 3
Factors to Consider: Legal formalities to create and operate Protection owner s property from business creditors Limited liability protection Tax considerations Transferability Presentation focus: formalities & limited liability, some tax 4
SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP 5
Sole Proprietorship Business owned by 1 person Not organized as LLC or corporation Business automatically sole proprietorship 6
Sole Proprietorship No legal formalities to create or maintain No filings with Sec of State BUT: permits, licenses, zoning depending on nature of business E.g. home daycare Food business 7
Sole Proprietor: Unlimited liability No protection owner s assets from business debts Sole proprietorship and owner are same person Same property Same debts Same creditors Insurance vital 8
Sole Proprietor Taxation Business gains, expenses, losses included in owner s income tax Business & owner same person. 9
GENERAL PARTNERSHIP 10
General Partnership 2 or more owners associated for profit Not organized as LLC, corporation, limited partnership, limited liability partnership Automatically a general partnership 11
General Partnership No legal formalities to create or maintain No filings with Sec of State BUT: permits, licenses, zoning (same as sole proprietor) Should have written partnership agreement Contract between owners Great flexibility Not a public document 12
General Partnership: Unlimited Liability, Each Partner Partnership owns property Distinct from partner s individual property Partnership has debts & creditors Distinct from partner s individual debts & creditors BUT each partner ultimately responsible all partnership debts Not just proportionate share of debts E.g. 10% owner liable for 100% of debt 13
General Partnership Management Unless partnership agreement provides differently, each partner can contract for partnership One partner s bad deal hurts all partners Unless partnership agreement provides differently, each partner gets equal share of profits 10% owner same share as 90% owner 14
General Partnership Income Taxation Partnership does not pay income tax Partnership gains & loss pass through to owners Reported on individual returns each year Regardless of distribution Partners not taxed on distributions 15
LIMITED LIABILITY LLC CORPORATION 16
LLC & Corporation = Legal Persons Separate From Their Owners Business owner Individual property Individual debts Individual creditors Can sue or be sued in individual name LLC or Corporation Business property Business debts Business creditors Can sue or be sued in LLC or corporate name 17
LLC & Corporation = Limited Liability Protection Separate legal persons from owners Owners property can t be taken by business creditors Same protection, LLC & corporation Major advantage over sole proprietor & general partnership Exceptions discussed later 18
LIMITED LIABLITY COMPANY (LLC) 19
LLC FORMATION: CERTIFICATE OF ORGANIZATION Certificate of Organization: Simple, 1 paragraph Name (including form of LLC) Street & mailing address designated office (can be home) Name, street & mailing address registered agent service of process (can be owner) Filing fees: $115 20
PUBLICATION Required for both S corp & LLC Once a week for 3 weeks Newspaper of general circulation in county where business is located Cost: about $60.00 21
LLC OWNERSHIP & CLASSES OF UNITS LLC members One member OK No upper limit No restriction on types of members May include other LLCs, corporations, partnerships Distributions may be disproportionate to investment (but IRS substantial economic effect rules) 22
LLC OPERATING AGREEMENT Contract between owners re operation Same flexibility as partnership agreement Not filed; not public 23
LLC OPERATING AGREEMENT Law presumes existence. Should be written. If verbal or implied, court may have to interpret Agreement, not LLC Act, controls. Act applies only to issues not covered by agreement 24
LLC OPERATING AGREEMENT Should address: Management rights & powers Division of profits, losses Procedures sale of interest Procedures death of member Member s bankruptcy, disability, divorce Many other possibilities 25
LLC Income Taxation 1 member LLC taxed as sole proprietorship Multimember LLC taxed as partnership LLC does not pay income tax LLC gains & losses pass through to members Taxed each year on allocated share regardless of distribution/receipt Distributions to members not taxed 26
S CORPORATION 27
S CORP/C CORP Both corporations. Taxed differently. C & S refer sections Internal Rev. Code C Corp pays its own income taxes Corp gains & losses do not affect shareholders income taxes Owners pay income tax on any distributions by C corp Double taxation at corp & individual levels 28
S CORP OWNERSHIP & CLASSES OF One member OK STOCK S Corp shareholders 100 shareholders max (family = 1 shareholder) Individuals only (narrow exceptions) Single owner LLC OK No nonresident aliens One class of stock only: distributions proportionate to stock held 29
S CORP FORMATION: ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION Filed Secretary of State Bus. name, authorized shares, par value Street address registered office & agent S corp restrictions S corp election Filing fee: $75 if less than 10,000 authorized shares
S Corp Publication Same as LLC Once a week for 3 weeks Local paper Cost about $60 31
S CORP: ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING Elect board of directors & officers Board can be one person One person can hold all offices Adopt bylaws Other business 32
S CORP: BYLAWS Must be written. Not filed; not public Less flexible. More statutory requirements. Procedures Bd elections, annual mtgs, etc. S Corp membership limitations Conditions for transfer of stock Share of profits, losses proportionate to investment 33
LIMITED LIABILITY EXCEPTIONS 1. Personal guarantee of note, contract Signing in your own name Signing owner personally liable for that loan 2. Personal negligence Run stop sign while driving company car Only negligent owner liable 34
LIMITED LIABILITY EXCEPTIONS 3. Piercing corporate veil : Failure maintain separate existence of LLC or S corp Use business account for personal expenses Business has no assets of its own Failure to observe corp formalities for S corp Results in total liability Especially dangerous for single owner 35
Formalities: Formation Filing with Sec. of State Publication Org. Meeting Sole Prop Gen Partship LLC No No Yes Cert of Org $115 No No Yes $60 S Corp Yes Art of Inc $65 Yes $60 No No No Yes 36
Formalities: Operation Governing Document Sole Prop None Gen Partship Partnership Agmt LLC Op Agmt S Corp Bylaws Bd of Dir No No No Yes Officers No No No Yes Shareholder Meetings Minutes & Resolutions No No No Yes No No No Yes 37
Formalities: Operation Shareholder Meetings Minutes & Resolutions Sole Prop Gen Partship LLC S Corp No No No Yes No No No Yes Biennial Report to Sec of State No No Yes $25 Yes $25 38
Limited Liability Protection Limited Liability Sole Pro Gen Partship LLC S Corp No No Yes Yes 39
Income Taxation Sole Proprietorship Business gains & losses also owner s General Partnership Pass-through taxation LLC 1 member: Sole proprietorship treatment Multi-member: Partnership treatment S corporation Pass-through taxation 40
Self-Employment Tax Social Security & Medicare for Self-Employed 15.3% as of 1.1.13 Must be paid on compensation No exemptions or deductions Paid on 92% of compensation S corp shields some profit from selfemployment tax LLC can elect to be taxed as S corp 41
TRANSFERABILITY Difficult for individual owners partnerships and multi-owner LLCs, corporations without consent of other owners Restrictions in governing document Remaining owners control fate of buyer. No management rights unless remaining members agree to accept 42